Events

Token on the Freedman’s Coat: The Story behind Thomas Mundy Peterson’s 1884 Voting Medal

21 April 2023

 

"To Cast A Freedman's Vote" Book Cover

 

Author Gordon Bond will discuss his book, To Cast a Freedmans Vote, the story of the first African American voter after the Civil War under the Fifteenth Amendment, at the April meeting of the Historical Society of Scotch Plains and Fanwood. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 25, at the Shady Rest Country Club, 820 Jerusalem Rd. (at the corner of Plainfield Avenue) in Scotch Plains.

On May 30, 1884, citizens of Perth Amboy, New Jersey, pinned a gold medal to Thomas Mundy Peterson’s coat in honor of his having done something that, in another part of the nation, a noose might have been put around his neck for daring. It had been proven that on March 31, 1870, Peterson was the first African American to vote under the Fifteenth Amendment. Ever since, the story of his historic vote has been told in terms of how unusually progressive Perth Amboy’s white community had been, having both encouraged and celebrated his suffrage as a matter of civic pride. Yet, in the process, Peterson himself has become a prop in his own story. The event that lifted his name out of obscurity had ironically obscured him.

“Token on the Freedman’s Coat” not only gives the background of this extraordinary event, but places it in a broader historical context that both underscores its significance and puts Peterson’s vote in a new and more complex light. This talk is based on Bond’s latest book, To Cast a Freedmans Vote: Thomas Mundy Peterson at the Intersection of Suffrage, Citizenship and Civil Rights, which he will have available for sale and signing following his program.

Bond is an independent historian, author and lecturer. He is the founder and ePublisher of www.GardenStateLegacy.com, a resources website dedicated to New Jersey history. He is the author of six books on aspects of New Jersey history, and has written a large number of articles and reviews for Garden State Legacy. He is currently working on two new books. One is about the Rev. Hannibal Goodwin and his invention of roll photographic film in Newark, New Jersey. The other explores the business and personal relationships between Benjamin Franklin and James Parker, New Jersey’s first printer.

Bond also operates a freelance graphic design business, Gordon Bond Design. He designed and guest curated exhibits for the Middlesex County Office of Arts and History, the Abraham Staats House in South Bound Brook, and the Historical Association of Woodbridge Township.

We are hoping to be able to webcast this event.  Further info will be posted on our website and FaceBook page as our plans develop.

The upcoming meeting is free and all are welcome. Refreshments and fellowship will follow the presentation. For questions, please email Info@HistoricalSocietySPFNJ.org or call 908/322-6700 Extension 230.

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Osborn Cannonball House Museum Open April 2nd from 2p.m. to 4p.m.

14 March 2023

Child fairies painting an Easter Egg. From Harper’s Young People of 1886.

 
Come celebrate an early Easter Celebration with us at The Osborn Cannonball House Museum.  The museum will be open to the public on Sunday, April 2, 2023 from 2:00 – 4:00 pm. Children can play Easter egg games and make and decorate a bunny mask to wear and enjoy a special Easter candy treat! 
 
You can also view our springtime antique clothing exhibit along with a special display of antique bonnets and hats. Costumed docents will be available to give tours of the c. 1760 house and tell you the story of the Osborn family, one of the early founding families of Scotch Plains, their 13 children, and the amazing story of how the house came to be known as the “Cannonball House”.

The Museum is located at 1840 Front Street, Scotch Plains, NJ  07076. Admission to the museum is free but donations are always welcome. 

For more information email Info@HistoricalSocietySPFNJ.org or call 908-322-6700 Extension 230.

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“Mothers of Invention”

12 March 2023

 

Lillian Moller Gilbreth

 

The March meeting of the Historical Society of Scotch Plains and Fanwood will feature the return of popular storyteller Carol Simon Levin with a new program called “Mothers of Invention.” Levin will tell the stories of women who overcame the combined barriers of gender and race to create inventions that changed our world. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March 28, at the Shady Rest Country Club, 820 Jerusalem Rd. (at the corner of Plainfield Avenue) in Scotch Plains.

Portraying Lillian Moller Gilbreth, motion study pioneer and the mother of 12 children in the semi-autobiographical novel, Cheaper by the Dozen, Levin will share the stories of overlooked women innovators, including many women of color. From Margaret Knight, known as the 19th century’s “female Edison,” to Hollywood superstar Hedy Lamarr, these “mothers of invention” changed our lives, yet their accomplishments were all too often ignored, discounted or credited to others.

In addition to performing lively historic portrayals, Levin is the author of Remembering the Ladies: From Patriots in Petticoats to Presidential Candidates, which profiles 69 women—well-known and unknown—who worked tirelessly for women’s rights in America. She holds a bachelor’s degree focusing on women’s history and history of technology from Cornell University and a master’s degree in library services from the University of Arizona. She is also the founder of the website tellingherstories.com.

The upcoming meeting is free and all are welcome. Refreshments and fellowship will follow the presentation. For questions, please email Info@HistoricalSocietySPFNJ.org or call 908/322-6700 Extension 230.

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